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Taiwan Deployed Hai Feng Shore-based Anti-Ship Missile Amid China Tension

Hai Feng Shore-based Anti-Ship Missile

A defense official said yesterday that the armed forces will establish the Republic of China Navy Sea Control Missile Command in Yunlin County’s Huwei Township by the end of the year.

The command would be headed by a rear admiral instead of a captain, underscoring the expanding size and importance of the navy’s anti-ship missile forces, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The headquarters would be comprised of administrative buildings and barracks, but no missile depot, which would be built elsewhere, due to opposition from local residents who did not want the base to be a potential target for strikes should China attack, the official said.

In November last year, Vice Premier Cheng Wen-tsan (鄭文燦) told a gathering of civic leaders in Yunlin County that President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) and Premier Chen Chien-jen (陳建仁) resolved to remove the missile depot after consulting with defense officials.

That decision aligns with the armed forces’ strategy for mobile air and coastal defense missile forces, which emphasizes mobility and vehicle-mounted missile launcher platforms over fixed-position defenses, the source said.

Taiwan is slated to receive 100 Harpoon Coastal Defense System Launcher Transporter Units and 400 Harpoon missiles from the US to augment the domestically produced Hsiung Feng line of missiles in the coastal defense mission, they said.

Previously, the navy’s Hai Feng Shore Based Anti-ship Missile Group controlled all anti-ship missile forces, which consisted of six fixed-launcher squadrons, four mobile squadrons and one support squadron.

An increase in equipment and personnel necessitated the creation of additional mobile squadrons that could not be efficiently controlled by a group-sized headquarters, the official said.

The Sea Control Missile Command is to control the existing forces, now designated as the First Hai Feng Shore Based Anti-ship Missile Group, and new groups of fresh mobile missile squadrons, they said.

The command last year quietly activated its second missile forces group headquartered in Taichung’s Cingshui District (清水) while a third missile forces group is to be activated by the middle of this year, they said.

Meanwhile, the military is poised to launch a surge in production of anti-ship missiles over the next two years in response to the threat posed by Chinese warships and aircraft, Ministry of National Defense sources said.

The production surge is aimed at increasing the manufacturing scale of Hsiung Feng II and Hsiung Feng III missile systems, they said.

The extended-range version of the Hsiung Feng II missiles increased the system’s effective range from 148km to an estimated 160km to 200km, and also feature improved maneuverability and anti-electronic warfare capabilities on par with Western designs, they said.

Hsiung Feng III missiles have an optimal engagement range of 150km to 200km, while the extended-range version has an effective range of 400km, the sources said.

The deployment of Hsiung Feng III missiles and the extend-range variants would greatly enhance the navy’s ability to defend the seas to Taiwan’s northern, eastern and southern areas, they said.

The ministry is also seeking to augment the mobility of the Hsiung Feng missile systems by fielding more mobile launch vehicles, sources said.

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